Cornelis van Cleve

Cornelis van Cleve, Cornelis van Cleef or Cornelis van der Beke, nickname Sotte Cleve ('Mad Cleve')[1] (1520 in Antwerp – 1567/1614)[2] was a Flemish Renaissance painter active in Antwerp who is known for his religious compositions and portraits. Starting his career in Antwerp in the workshop of his father Joos van Cleve, he later worked for a while in London. When he failed to achieve success in England, he became insane and stopped painting.[3]

Adoration of the Magi

Life

He was born in Antwerp as the son of Anna Vijdt and Joos van Cleve, a prominent representative of the 16th-century Antwerp school of painting.[4] Little is known about his training but it is believed he trained in his father's studio. Some details of his life have become mixed up with those of his father. It was believed previously it was his father who became mad and was given the nickname 'Sotte Cleve' ('Mad Cleve'). However, the current view is that it was Cornelis who became mad.[3]

Holy Family

Cornelis was a proficient helper in the studio of his father, probably from 1535 to 1540. It is not clear when Cornelis van Cleve became a master in the local Guild of Saint Luke. As the son of a master he did not need to register as a pupil with the Guild. He may have become a master in the Guild year 1540-1541 during which his father died. The records of the Guild for that year are lost.[5] He seems to have been a struggling artist. There are reports that in 1546 and 1547 he had difficulties making payments on his house. This is likely the reason why he sold the house in 1555 and emigrated to England. An additional reason may have been that he harbored Protestant sympathies, as may be surmised from the name of his daughter Abigael.[6]

The artist likely went to England to seek the patronage of Philip II of Spain who had become the joint ruler of England after his marriage to Mary I of England.[7] The madness was reportedly caused by a conflict between Cornelis and the prominent portrait painter Anthonis Mor. He had asked Mor to plead on his behalf with Philip II to give him commissions but Mor's intercession had been unsuccessful.[7] This episode caused the artist to become insane.[8]

It is not clear when the artist died. Estimates place the time of his death between 1567 and 1614.[3]

Works

Virgin of the Annunciation

Cornelis van Cleve was only active during a fourteen-year period in Antwerp and London. Nevertheless, he was able to leave an extensive body of work as can be deduced from the frequent mention of his works in 16th and 17th-century inventories. Rubens owned two works by the artist.[5] The English King Charles I also owned two works by 'Sotte Cleve', which are no longer in the Royal Collection including a 'Bacchus feast of children being some, one and twenty figures'.[9] Max J. Friedländer identified a group of works originally attributed to an artist given the notname Pseudo-Lombard as works of Cornelis van Cleve.[5] Of the works attributed to both Joos van Cleve and Cornelis van Cleve, the authorship of father or son remains often a matter of dispute.[10]

Cornelis van Cleve painted predominantly religious paintings and to a lesser extent mythological scenes and portraits.[3] Walter Friedländer organised van Cleve's pictures in chronological order, based on the development in his style. He thus showed that the painter had distanced himself gradually from his father's style. Initially he was a representative of the tradition in the period dominated by Pieter Coecke van Aelst, Frans Floris and Anthonis Mor, Flemish painters who had studied in Italy or had become influenced by Italian art. He made efforts to keep up with the new style by eagerly looking around for Italian models.[5] This paintings show influences from Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci and Andrea del Sarto.[11]

References

  1. Cleve, Cornelis van der Beke van (Sotte Cleef) at the Frick Collection
  2. Leo van Puyvelde (1942), The Flemish drawings in the collection of His Majesty the King at Windsor Castle, p. 13
  3. Cornelis van Cleve at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
  4. Frans Jozef Peter Van den Branden, Geschiedenis der Antwerpsche schilderschool, Antwerpen, 1883, p. 128 (in Dutch)
  5. Max J. Friedländer, Early Netherlandish painting, A.W. Sijthoff, 1972
  6. Gordon Campbell, The Grove Encyclopedia of Northern Renaissance Art, OUP USA, 2009, p. 377
  7. Susan E. James, The Feminine Dynamic in English Art, 1485-1603: Women as Consumers, Patrons and Painters, Routledge
  8. Cornelis van Cleve, A Madonna and Child with the Infant Saint John the Baptist at Dorotheum
  9. Lorne Campbell, The Early Flemish Pictures in the Collection of Her Majesty the Queen Hardcover, 1985, p. 21
  10. P. van den Brink, Joos van Cleve, Leonardo des Nordens, Aachen/Stuttgart 2011 (in German)
  11. Henri Pauwels, in Dictionnaire des Peintres Belges, Kirk Irpa, 1994 (in French)

Further reading

  • C. Justi, Der Fall Cleve, in Jb der preuss. Kunstsmlg., 16, 1895, p. 32.
  • G. Hulin de Loo, Conjecture touchant le Sotte Cleve, in Petite Rev. illustrée de l'Art et de l'Archéol. en Flandre, 1903, pp. 87–91, 115–118.
  • M. J. Friedländer, Nachtträgliches zu Cornelis van Cleve, in Oud Holland, LX, 1943, pp. 7–14; E.N.P., IXa, 1972, pp. 44, 49–50, 72–74.
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